Flight of Remembrance: A World War II Memoir of Love and Suirvival—Excerpt
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Transcript of Flight of Remembrance: A World War II Memoir of Love and Suirvival—Excerpt
FLIGHTofREMEMBRANCE
A World War II Memoir of Love and Survival
Marina Dutzmann Kirsch
Kensington, New Hampshire
Copyright ©2012 by Marina Dutzmann Kirsch. All rights reserved. With the exception of brief quotations for articles or reviews, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher of this book.
Unless otherwise indicated, all photos are part of the Dutzmann family collection.
Although the author and editors have made every effort to ensure the accuracy of all of the information in this book including historical facts, no responsibility will be assumed for errors, inaccuracies, omissions or inconsistencies.
For more information, please visitwww.kirschstonebooks.com or email the author at [email protected]
Kirsch, Marina Dutzmann.Flight of remembrance : a World War II memoir of love
and survival / Marina Dutzmann Kirsch.p. cm.Includes bibliographical references.LCCN 2011910888ISBN-13: 978-0-9835653-4-5ISBN-10: 0-9835653-4-1
1. Dutzmann, Rolf, 1919- 2. Dutzmann, Lilo, 1921-3. World War, 1939-1945--Germany--Biography. 4. WorldWar, 1939-1945--Women--Germany--Biography. 5. Latvia--History--1918-1940. I. Title.
D811.5.K57 2011 940.53'092'2QBI11-600142
Rolf and Lilo Dutzmann, postwar Germany, 1949
Flight of Remembrance is dedicated to the people of Wakarusa, Indiana, a
small town with a big heart, and to my parents, Rolf and Lilo, two otherwise
ordinary people whose unfailing devotion to God, family and each other
makes them a shining example to all who know them. These characteristics
form the golden thread that runs throughout their wartime and postwar
experiences even up to the present time, weaving events of their lives in
extraordinary ways to create a rich tapestry of love, hope and optimism
amidst adversity. But this book is also dedicated to the millions of people
who did not survive to share their stories of the twentieth century’s most
gruesome and devastating war.
Contents v
Contents
Acknowledgments........................................................ix
Foreword: In War’s Vortex ............................................xii
Preface..............................................................................xvi
Prologue: Farewell to the Old World ............................xxi
Map: Northern Europe, December 1939 ....................xxv
PART I IMAGINATION (Rolf ’s Story)
Chapter 1: Storm Clouds Gather........................................3
Chapter 2: Taking Flight from Latvia..............................14
Chapter 3: An Invitation from the SS..............................19
Chapter 4: Harsh Awakening in Poland..........................24
Chapter 5: Early Years on the Baltic Sea..........................27
Chapter 6: A Boy with Vision ..........................................32
Chapter 7: Developing a Technical Calling ....................38
Chapter 8: The 1936 Olympics........................................41
Chapter 9: The Final Years in Latvia................................46
vi FLIGHT OF REMEMBRANCE
Chapter 10: Delaying the Draft........................................51
Chapter 11: May I Have This Dance?................................59
PART II FAITH (Lilo’s Story)
Chapter 12: A Girl Who Dreams......................................79
Chapter 13: Learning to Walk ..........................................85
Chapter 14: School Days End ..........................................91
Chapter 15: On Wings of Song ........................................98
Chapter 16: When Sirens Sound....................................103
Chapter 17: The Crossing Letters ..................................107
Chapter 18: The Zoppot Idyll ........................................112
Part III SURVIVAL
Chapter 19: Drafted into the Luftwaffe..........................123
Chapter 20: A Second Serving of Käsetorte..................130
Chapter 21: Terror in the Night......................................135
Chapter 22: The Bombing of Peenemünde ..................143
Chapter 23: Berlin Amidst the Ashes ............................149
Chapter 24: The War Effort Falters ..............................156
Contents vii
Chapter 25: The Family Home in Ruins ......................159
Chapter 26: Escape to Havelberg ..................................164
Chapter 27: Perfecting Hitler’s Secret Weapon ............168
Chapter 28: Something Borrowed, Something Blue ....174
Chapter 29: Flower Petals Along Their Path ................179
PART IV DESPERATION
Chapter 30: The Allies Advance ....................................193
Chapter 31: The Russians are Coming ..........................201
Chapter 32: Crossing the Harz Mountains ..................208
Chapter 33: Dispatch to the Front ................................212
Chapter 34: POW in the Freezing Mud ........................219
Chapter 35: Escape from the Soviet Zone ....................228
Chapter 36: A Startling Revelation................................233
Chapter 37: The First Woman I See ..............................236
Chapter 38: En Route to Bingen....................................241
PART V HOPE
Chapter 39: Postwar Privation and Pleasure ................249
Chapter 40: The Harshest Winter..................................254
Chapter 41: On the List for America..............................262
Chapter 42: I Look to the Hills ....................................267
Chapter 43: Last-Minute Surprises ..............................275
Epilogue: From Dream to Reality..................................281
Endnotes..........................................................................290
Appendix 1: A Word about Sources and Dialogue ....294
Appendix 2: A Word about Ernst Dutzmann............299
Appendix 3: The Mittelbau-Dora
Concentration Camp Memorial............320
Bibliography ..............................................................323
Index ..............................................................................325
viii FLIGHT OF REMEMBRANCE
Acknowledgments ix
Acknowledgments
The Dutzmann family will be forever indebted to the people of Wakarusa,
Indiana, especially Jesse and Amanda Longfield, Roy and Grace Summers, and
Edward and Liz Nusbaum who bore the risk of sponsoring members of our
family to immigrate to the US. Along with the Bittingers, Rogers, Lechlitners,
Weldys, Browns, Yoders and others, they also spared no expense or effort to
make us feel welcome. Their kindness was of a magnitude that can never be
adequately repaid. In retrospect, we realize that we were fortunate to be
“adopted” by a group of Americans as helpful and altruistic as any to be found
on the North American continent. We are also grateful to C. G. Conn, Ltd.
(cgconn.com), an industry leader then and now in the manufacture of musical
instruments, for offering Rolf and Ernst their first employment in the USA.
There are numerous people who assisted with this book. I thank Dr. Angelo
Codevilla, veteran author (claremont.org/scholars/id.25/scholar.asp), Professor
Emeritus of International Relations at Boston University, and former senior
member of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, for the insightful and
heartwarming foreword he supplied to introduce and accompany my family’s
story, including glimpses into his own postwar experiences in Italy.
Sound advice that I received from Sam Baily, Rutgers University history
Professor Emeritus, regarding sections of the narrative, as well as clarification of
sources in the appendix and bibliography, was tremendously helpful and has
served to make the book more informative to readers.
Additional feedback and recommendations for the technical sections of the
manuscript about the V-2 rocket and Appendix II about Ernst Dutzmann, as
x FLIGHT OF REMEMBRANCE
well as corrections to the December 1939 map of northern Europe, were
graciously supplied by Dr. Michael J. Neufeld of the National Air and Space
Museum of the Smithsonian (gosmithsonian.com/ museums/ national-air-and-
space-museum).
Dr. Jens-Christian Wagner, director of the Mittelbau-Dora Concentration
Camp Memorial in Germany (dora.de), provided transcripts of my grandfather,
Ernst Dutzmann’s, statements after the war, as well as websites and general
information that helped me to piece together the scenes dealing with my
grandfather’s technical work during the war and supplemental information
about him to include in Appendix II. He also read all of the technical sections
of the manuscript to ensure accuracy and provided an informative tour of the
Mittelbau-Dora Concentration Camp Memorial site when my husband and I
visited in September of 2011. It is heartening that the memorial presents its grim
subject matter in such a thorough and thoughtful manner, with the deepest
respect and recognition rendered to the thousands of concentration camp
inmates who suffered and died at that location during World War II.
Three German relatives, Marta Siemes, Ilse Dietel and Dr. Guido Dietel,
searched through their family photo archives to come up with additional
wartime photographs. Theirs is also the family that so generously took in my
mother, my aunt and both grandmothers during the early postwar time in
Krefeld, Germany when housing was so scarce.
During the final months before publication, I received much-appreciated
suggestions from Janet Szarmach, director of the Kensington, New Hampshire
Public Library (kensingtonpubliclibrary.org).
My heartfelt thanks to all of the aforementioned for their valuable assistance.
My central support and primary cheering section throughout the process of
researching, writing and editing this book have been my parents, Rolf and Lilo,
and my older brother, Ingo, Senior Pastor at the First Lutheran Church of Boston
(flc-boston.org). They verified a myriad of facts, proofread countless versions of
the manuscript, prevented a multitude of mistakes and regularly offered
priceless encouragement in order to support my vision for this book. A close
Acknowledgments xi
friend, Helen Kredo, also devoted considerable time to reading versions of
the manuscript and offering suggestions. I deeply appreciate their love,
consideration and efforts.
In the final phase of the writing odyssey, I was fortunate enough to work
with three outstanding editors, all three of whom are knowledgeable about
World War II material—Paul Schneider (www.schneiderbooks.com) and Maggy
and Alan Graham (wordsandpicturespress.com). Paul’s insightful comments on
the first chapter led to a rewrite of the entire book to make it more consistent,
descriptive and compelling. Maggy has been my sounding board and guiding
light for the entire finished manuscript, helping to mold it into the best work
possible and dispensing many valuable suggestions along the way. She has an
impressive ability to ferret out small errors and inconsistencies without ever
losing sight of the big picture and the central themes of a story. Towards the end
of the editing process, her husband, Alan Graham, offered his services to read the
manuscript with an eye to restructuring some of the content. The result was a
narrative that flows more smoothly with a more consistent point of view. I am
very grateful to all three editors for their friendly professionalism, enthusiasm
and attention to detail.
Websites for Wakarusa, Indiana:
amishcountry.org/explore-the-area/cities-and-towns/wakarusa
wakarusa.org
wakarusachamber.com
xii FLIGHT OF REMEMBRANCE
Foreword
In War's VortexBy Dr. Angelo M. Codevilla
Most of the millions of people caught up in wars direct their energies
to surviving them with their persons, families, morals and hopes for the future
as intact as possible. When forces bent on war press any country’s inhabitants
into service, they narrow the options for survival, demand the utmost of labor
in exchange for the meagerest sustenance, and subject all to circumstances and
arbitrary decisions, each of which can make the difference between life and
death. At the war’s end, survivors unlucky enough to be on the losing side must
try to keep body, soul, family and hopes alive through even greater privation
imposed by victorious forces over which they have even less control.
Americans, having been blessed with peace at home for a century and a half,
have no direct knowledge of such things. That is why Americans should read
Flight of Remembrance, the story of the Dutzmann family’s odyssey from 1920s
Latvia through the Germany of World War II, ending in immigration to
America’s Promised Land.
All families, all circumstances, are special. The Dutzmanns are unusual in
that all of them lived through the war. Their technical expertise gave them access
to military specialties that reduced their exposure to death, shielded their lack
of enthusiasm for the Nazi cause, enabled them to earn enough not to starve,
Foreword xiii
and eventually improved their eligibility for immigration to the United States.
Nevertheless, their experience is in many ways familiar to all Europeans who
struggled through war and occupation.
The Dutzmann family’s story grips me: as a student of war, as someone whose
childhood memories are of privation in war-torn Italy, and as a family man
grateful for never having had to conjure up morsels of food and lumps of coal
day after day, and for never having had to stand in front of officials who held my
family’s life in their hands. The author of this story, Marina Dutzmann Kirsch,
born days before the family came to America, organized her parents’ and
grandparents’ remembrances into snapshots of her father’s and mother’s
families at different stages of their lives. Most chapters, while recounting deeply
personal concerns with life and love, achievement and disappointment, are set
in the context of major international events. The point could not be clearer: as
the war ground on, ordinary people tried not to be ground to dust.
The Dutzmanns, like many if not most Europeans, were of mixed nationality:
legally citizens of Latvia, ethnically German, but formerly subjects of Imperial
Russia, in whose army Ernst Dutzmann, the author's grandfather, had served
as an officer during World War I. The Stalin-Hitler pact that started World War
II turned Latvia over to Stalin, forcing the family to choose between immediate
execution or exile to Siberia on the one hand or repatriation and service to
Germany on the other.
How much loyalty do you owe to a government you dislike and to a war that
has already deprived you of your home? Ernst Dutzmann reminded his family
that it had some moral obligation to Germany, a country that had rescued them
from the fate that Stalin reserved for ethnic Germans and outspoken anti-
communists in the Baltic States, and the only country that welcomed the family
to pursue life within its borders. The German war machine continued to stand
between them and the Soviets. Besides, it would be senseless suicide for ordinary
people to flout or sabotage the regime. Yet to live was to work, and to work was
to help a regime not of the family’s choice. Ernst, employed as a top-notch
engineer, performed as such. Rolf ’s upbringing and schooling had prepared him
xiv FLIGHT OF REMEMBRANCE
to follow in his father’s professional footsteps. He was drafted. Ethics and
practical necessity merged to steer him into decisions where he could do the
best for himself while fulfilling his duties and doing the least harm. At the time,
father and son could have done much better for themselves and their family by
joining the Nazi party and the SS. But neither did that. Their wartime story was
of hunkering down and hoping that the peril would pass them by.
As the storm rages, people think above all of their loved ones. Does he love
me? Does she love me? Rolf asked himself whether Mother and Father would
approve of his choice of a marriage partner and whether lifetime commitments
even make sense at a time when all lives hang by the slenderest of threads. Lilo,
on the other hand, had her own reasons to be wary of the relationship. Would
they finally decide to marry? Would Rolf be able to obtain wedding leave during
some of the darkest times of the war? Would the couple find a clergyman
willing to straddle the line between Catholic and Protestant? Where and how
would enough food be obtained for the celebration amidst severe wartime
rationing? If they did finally marry, would they survive to make a life together
or would they become just two more casualties of Nazi Germany's devastating
Total War policy?
Most surprising to readers who have never had to struggle through war’s grip
is how peripheral the huge events of the epoch are to those who endure them,
and how central, how memorable, are such personal concerns as maintaining
one’s honor, developing one’s career, making a good marriage, and keeping the
family together with as much contact as possible with its past, as well as meeting
the daily challenges of survival. For many civilians in wartime, a cup of real,
instead of ersatz, coffee or a handful of vegetables from a local farm, along with
acts of kindness exhibited by friends and total strangers alike, provide vivid and
lasting memories, while accounts of the major turning points of war, the battles
and the casualties, are destined to remain once removed from consciousness.
As World War II’s storm passed, it left millions of Central Europeans
destitute, separated from their families, and subject to competing jurisdictions.
For these millions, the paramount preoccupation was to get away from the
Foreword xv
Soviet troops and thereafter to reconnect with their families while saving such
material means of survival as they could. The Dutzmann and Wassull families
were no exception to this, experiencing upheaval after upheaval and chaos upon
chaos in the quest not only to survive, but to piece together what remained of
lives harshly compromised by the dire circumstances of wartime.
Americans—and Europeans younger than fifty-five or so—can hardly
imagine what America meant to the generation of Europeans who lived through
World War II. My earliest, most pleasant memories in postwar Italy were of
receiving care packages from America and chocolate from American soldiers.
America was the place whence all good things flowed, a place that had to be
inhabited by people far more powerful and far more beneficent than any human
beings that ever walked the soil of the Old World. Children dreamed of America.
Adults yearned to go there. We really did not understand America. But all sensed
that it was different, and better. The care packages themselves were wonders,
filled with life-giving fats and proteins, with canned meats measured in pounds
rather than scant grams. And the Americans were just giving these things away,
even to former enemies. Why the Americans were more generous and more
trusting as well as richer, none of us knew. But many of us were so struck by the
idea of America that we wanted to become Americans. Some of us were actually
blessed with the chance so to transform ourselves.
The Dutzmanns’ flight of remembrance ends with their flight to America.
This reader, who celebrates the anniversary of his own 1955 arrival in New York
Harbor past the Statue of Liberty more fervently than a birthday and whose
first contacts with American society still fill him with wonder, recommends
that the author someday explore further her family’s remembrances to
encompass the contrast between their former lives as Europeans and their new
ones as Americans.
Dr. Angelo M. CodevillaProfessor Emeritus, Boston University
Author of War: Ends And MeansPlymouth, California
xvi FL I G H T O F RE M E M B R A N C E
Preface
Igrew up in a German immigrant family during the expansive 1950s in the
American near-West. The first language my brothers and I learned was not
English, but German—the predominant language spoken at home in those early
years. By the time I reached school age, however, the English language was
rapidly gaining linguistic dominion over our household.
In order to preserve our German language skills, my parents chose to amuse
and inspire us with tales from German storybooks, with our favorite being Der
Struwwelpeter, loosely translated as Shock-Headed Peter, an endearing and
cleverly illustrated, sometimes funny, occasionally frightening, children’s book
of cautionary tales. Written by Dr. Heinrich Hoffman, a nineteenth century
German physician and psychiatrist (1809-1894), it is a classic that has been
around to entertain and instruct generations of children ever since the mid-
1800s, including both my parents’ and grandparents’ generations. It contains
stories about the tragedies that might befall children who play with matches,
refuse to eat their dinner, don't watch where they are going, or suck their
thumbs. As I got older, it dawned on me that many of the stories have a depth
of meaning hidden from the very young by charmingly simple words and pretty
pictures. Underneath the frequently humorous surface details, they actually
address some of the larger issues in life, such as bigotry and racism, cruelty
towards people and animals, disregard for authority, and the realization that
consequences continually spring from all of our actions. Having played a part
in my parents’ formative years as well as my own, Der Struwwelpeter provides a
colorful common thread weaving through the Flight of Remembrance narrative.
It is a familiar icon to many people of German descent but also a poignant
Preface xvii
reminder to readers everywhere that even in the midst of the utmost turmoil,
people struggle to maintain their daily life and a sense of normalcy: to eat, to
breathe, to seek warmth, comfort and shelter, and to read stories to their children.
As an adult, I continue to be intrigued and entertained by a good story. I
absorbed bits and pieces of my parents’ and grandparents’ wartime experiences
throughout my growing up years. But it was not until the fall of 1994, when I
finished reading the 230-page family history painstakingly written by my parents
over the course of many years, that I finally gained an overview of the expansive
saga spanning the years from World War I through post-World War II. I was
stunned by the emotional sweep, the high drama and suspense, and the
profoundly human elements, as well as the astonishing, synchronistic chain of
events, that make their narrative so compelling and so memorable. Almost a
decade later, in November of 2003, I was moved anew by their story when a New
Hampshire newspaper, The Concord Sunday Monitor, printed a lengthy front-
page article “For German soldier, a long, strange road to freedom,” complete
with sepia-tone World War II era photographs. Again in 2004, The Laconia
Citizen ran a story on the front page of the “Living” section entitled “Love
conquers all: German couple celebrates 60th wedding anniversary.” In the spring
of 2009, the Citizen ran yet another story in honor of my father’s approaching
90th birthday. Over time, I became convinced that this story should be offered
to a much wider readership.
At a time when eyewitnesses to World War II are dying out and the world is
still struggling to come to grips with the reality of that most devastating of all
armed conflicts, Flight of Remembrance provides a glimpse into the lives of
ordinary people who were positioned on “the other side.” Swept along on a
tide of dire necessity and circumstance, Rolf, a young man with a passion for
aeronautical engineering is forced to relocate from his Latvian homeland to Nazi
Germany. There, in the pursuit of his career, he is drafted into the military and
becomes embroiled in a war that threatens to bring about his demise. But it is
also a story of the seen and unseen forces that coalesce to keep him, his family
and the love of his life, Lilo, alive as they experience relentless, cataclysmic events
xviii FLIGHT OF REMEMBRANCE
beyond imagining for anyone who has not experienced the ravages of war waged
on home soil.
Whereas Flight of Remembrance chronicles a young man’s passion for his
calling and his pursuit of a technical career against daunting wartime odds, it is
first and foremost a tender and enduring love story that plays out against a
panorama of worldwide chaos and destruction. What became crystal clear to
me as I researched historical material for this book is the truly worldwide scope
of suffering in World War II, with almost every nation across the globe tragically
affected. I also found that the atrocities and genocide perpetrated under the
Stalin regime were equally or more horrifying and brutally destructive than
those masterminded by the Nazi regime in Germany. Countries such as the
Baltic States, Poland and other eastern European nations that were precariously
situated between the two dictatorships suffered devastating consequences. In
the case of the area of Europe now known as Poland, repeated takeovers
accompanied by executions, deportations and massive human and material
losses occurred during both World Wars.
Through my work on this book to retell my parents’ wartime experiences, I
feel that I have lived and breathed the most agonizing chapter in twentieth
century history, thereby experiencing indirectly a world shattered by conflict,
but I have also had the delightful privilege of coming to know my parents in a
totally new and different way—as the two young people they were before I was
born. They were two people in love, but fatefully positioned in Nazi Germany,
at the epicenter of a worldwide conflagration that ruthlessly incinerated the
hopes, the dreams and the lives of tens of millions of people.
Although reports of World War II death rates vary widely, the death toll is
generally estimated at between fifty and seventy-seven million, with the total
military dead approximated at twenty-five million including four to five million
prisoners of war. The Allied forces suffered over eighteen million losses, largely
due to the vast number of Soviet casualties, and the Axis forces six million.
Roughly three and a quarter million of those military losses were German.
Far more staggering than the estimate of military casualties during World War
II, however, is the civilian death toll of forty to fifty-two million people
Preface xix
worldwide. As many as twenty million people perished from war-related disease
and famine. Almost nine million were Holocaust victims, among them six million
Jews. Civilian deaths in Germany numbered upwards of two-and-a-half million,
with an estimated 543 thousand of those resulting from air raids on German
cities.
Flight of Remembrance portrays a group of strong, resilient German women,
but they could have been women from any other time and any other place in the
world who survived a major war. Lilo, Gertrud, Maria and Ruth share the
everyday hardships and emotions common to women everywhere during such
harrowing times as they deal with the catastrophic circumstances that crash in on
them not just once, but over and over again like deadly breakers on a hostile
shore. Fears for personal survival and the survival of loved ones, interminable
times of waiting for news and receiving none, the loss of home and possessions
due to bombings and forced relocations, the ever-present physical trials and
setbacks—these and other experiences were common themes in their daily lives.
But the distinguishing feature of this group of women, lending a sense of light
and hope to the story, is the combination of their eternal optimism, faith in God,
and fearless, instinctive ingenuity in the face of adversity. These traits enabled
them to display extraordinary courage and determination, to take risks and make
decisions that, under ordinary circumstances, would have been the prerogative of
the men of their era. They also maintained a perennial attitude of hope that flew
in the face of dire outer conditions and rejoiced in the small pleasures of life
wherever they could still be found during wartime. The overall resourcefulness
and fortitude displayed by the women in the family created a chain of mutual
assistance that helped to ensure the survival of all whom they loved and far
surpassed what they would have been inspired to do under peacetime conditions.
Selfless acts of kindness from others and the assistance of total strangers
proved pivotal to my family’s survival as well, suggesting that, side by side with
the baser aspects of human nature that were exhibited to such an appalling degree
during World War II, there also existed a nobler urge that surfaced at times—an
underlying sense of connectedness and mutual responsibility that prompted
the human family to act from kind-hearted, altruistic motives.
It is unlikely that a mere instinct for survival would have resulted in the kind
of positive outcome that my family experienced at a time when millions of their
generation perished. Technical skills undoubtedly helped them to survive, but
throughout the war and postwar years, they also displayed a resilient sense of inner
purpose along with an unwavering conviction that a better future awaited them.
From being airborne in a glider over the fields of Latvia to the development and
use of his skills in the US many years later, my father, Rolf, never lost sight of his
dream. Perhaps it was farsighted attitudes such as these that enabled members of
my family not only to embrace opportunities that would ensure survival, but also
to remain solidly focused on future prosperity and happiness amidst tragic and
turbulent times. Whatever the reasons, they blazed a determined path of survival
through a daunting wilderness of death and destruction, emerging out of the
rubble to embrace a bold new vision of their destiny.
The Berlin Wall fell on November 9, 1989, exactly twenty-two years prior to the
day I wrote this paragraph. That day marked a literal and symbolic reunification
of what was ripped asunder during World War II, bringing with it a much-needed
healing. The enormous trauma of World War II combat, programmed mass
genocide under both the Nazi and Soviet regimes, communities being torn
asunder, homes destroyed, families irrevocably separated, the land ravaged, lives
cut short: all created a tremendous Weltschmerz (universal pain and suffering).
Images of that time captured in film, photos, print and memory will continue to
rise as ghastly specters to haunt the human family for all generations to come. It
is my hope, without in any way diminishing the stories of those who perished
unjustly, that Flight of Remembrance will provide an uplifting reminder that out
of somber darkness, new life can arise like a radiant dawn. May humanity now
rise to usher in a future of peace and freedom, in which kindness is extended to
all beings and all people are empowered to realize their most cherished dreams.
Marina Dutzmann Kirsch
Kensington, NH
December, 2011
xx FLIGHT OF REMEMBRANCE
Prologue
Farewell to the Old World
On a cold, blustery, late December day in 1951, a tall man clutching a felt fedora
held a little boy firmly by the hand as they crossed the windy tarmac to board a
waiting Swissair flight. The hem of his long, double-breasted topcoat flapped
insistently with each step. Just ahead of them, a woman of medium height with
soft, gentle features and blonde hair neatly upswept beneath a felt hat, carried
an infant bundled up like a cocoon against the chill morning air.
“Will we be going very high in the air above those clouds, Papa?” Ingo asked
as he skipped alongside his father.
“Ja, Ingolein, we will be going very high,” his father replied somewhat
distractedly while scanning the overcast sky and distant horizon.
“How high, Papa?”
After thinking a moment, he replied, “Oh, I would say fifteen thousand feet
or so.” Then, noticing his son’s puzzled look, he added, “It would take many
Empire State Buildings one on top of the other to get as high in the sky as we will
be going.”
There was silence as the little boy digested this bit of information, obviously
impressed. Ever since his parents, Rolf and Lilo, had told him that they would
soon be leaving their homeland and going far, far away across the ocean, the
Farewell to the Old World xxi
little boy had been bursting with curiosity about the place called America. And
of all the wonders that he had been told about the new land, the Empire State
Building had always struck his young imagination as the most magnificent and
magical of all.
“That is very, very high, Papa! And what will keep us from falling out of the sky?”
At this, Lilo turned in amusement, her expression soft and gentle. “Don’t
start your papa on that, Ingo. You will get a very long, confusing answer that
you won’t be able to understand because you are too young.”
Ingo was carrying a little red suitcase in one hand, and under his other arm,
a picture book. As Rolf helped him up the metal steps to the plane, Ingo hugged
the book more tightly to his side. Rolf smiled. The book had been Ingo’s favorite
for most of his four years. The little metal suitcase, however, was brand new—
an early Christmas gift received from his grandmother just a couple of weeks
previously. Ingo looked up at his father, ready to launch another question, when
a sudden strong gust of wind stole the words from his mouth. Rolf turned his
intense gaze to Lilo, ahead of them on the steps, who somehow managed to hold
onto her hat while cradling their infant daughter more tightly in the other arm.
Once safely settled on board, Ingo held up the treasured book to Rolf
insistently. On the cover was an amusing, colorful figure with unkempt hair and
outrageously long fingernails with the title Der Struwwelpeter arched above it in
bright red, antique script. All of Ingo’s favorite stories were in that book,
accompanied by colorful illustrations: the story of Struwwelpeter (Shock-Headed
Peter), who refused to cut his hair and nails, as well as stories about what
happens to little boys who suck their thumbs, who refuse to eat their dinner and
who are cruel to people and animals. Rolf noticed that Ingo quickly turned past
the story that never failed to make him cry, the one about Paulinchen, a little girl
who insisted on playing with matches and came to a dreadful end. It was no day
for sad stories.
“Please, Papa, read me this story, the one about the little rabbit in the leafy
nest and the man with the gun!” he pleaded as he wriggled back into his seat to
get more comfortable.
xxii PROLOGUE
Rolf, having settled his wife and daughter, smiled tenderly at his son and
began to read about a hunter who goes out to shoot a rabbit, but the rabbit
outwits the hunter by stealing his gun while he is taking a nap under a tree. The
rabbit then turns the gun on the hunter, but only manages instead to shoot a
coffee cup out of the hand of the hunter’s wife, who is leaning out of the window
of their house. This causes hot coffee to spill and burn the nose of the rabbit’s
child, a little bunny who is sitting in the grass below the window.
Lilo attempted to rock her daughter to sleep by humming softly to her. But
the baby was wide awake, her pensive, blue-eyed gaze widening as if captivated
by the sound of her father’s voice, or perhaps mesmerized by the clouds outside
the window that swept with relentless urgency across her field of vision.
Not until adulthood did I finally understand the lesson of that story—that the
results of our actions continue to reverberate into our future whether we realize the
connection or not, that for every action there is a reaction and a consequence for
good or for ill. But on that day in December of 1951, I was too young to understand
the stories in my brother’s book, much less to realize the impact that this solitary
plane flight would have on my family’s future—a future very different from the
past we were leaving behind. This flight to the New World was the culmination of
a long sequence of flights—from my father’s first flight in Latvia on a glider marked
with the historic cross of the Latvian National Guard, to flights of technical genius,
flights of imagination, and flights of the human spirit that made possible courageous
leaps of faith into dim uncertainty. Even more poignant were the flights of raw
desperation, sheer necessity and stark survival that tore like mortar shells through
the years before I was born. The vast conflict gripping the world ripped away at the
very fabric of my family’s existence, threatening to immolate with merciless finality
all living generations, along with those yet unborn, in a brutal, yet spell-binding
incendiary display.
Farewell to the Old World xxiii
Flight of RemembranceLocations and Journeys Map(Showing northern Europe with December 1939 borders)
▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲
The Dutzmann family’s escape from Latvia to Germany by ship in December 1939, arriving in Seebad Bansin,then Posen and Litzmannstadt in German-occupied Poland, then in Berlin, Wiegandsthal and Benneckensteinin Germany proper. Rolf and Ernst were moved to additional locations on this map during their military service.
Lilo and Gertrud’s journey first from Berlin to Havelberg to escape the bombing in March 1944, and then 100miles on foot from Havelberg to Benneckenstein to flee the advancing Soviet troops in May 1945
Rolf ’s 160-mile journey on foot from the front near the Rhine River to Benneckenstein in April 1945
Gertrud’s three round-trip solo journeys by train, on foot and hitchhiking into the Soviet Zone between 1945 and 1947
Map of Dutzmann and Wassull Journeys xxv
Part I
IMAGINATION
(Rolf ’s Story)
“The future belongs to those
who believe in the beauty of
their dreams.”
— Eleanor Roosevelt
Storm Clouds Gather 3
Chapter 1
Storm Clouds Gather
The details and circumstances of the morning when the phone call came were
not so different from most other mornings. Like a footprint left in the sand of
one of Rolf ’s favorite Baltic beaches, a footprint destined to be washed away
by a merciless surf, the phone call came and went. He had no way of knowing
that in its wake, all that had become comfortingly familiar in his life would be
swept away wholesale in the storm surge of subsequent events. Had that phone
call never come, life as he knew it might have continued for a time, but before
long, the disaster and loss that was soon to descend on Latvia would have
overtaken his family as well.
“Rolf, you must come home right away!” his father insisted emphatically over
the wire.
It was October 21, 1939, when Rolf received the call in the hallway of the
boarding house in Riga where he was renting a room in order to pursue his
aeronautical engineering studies at the University of Latvia. He had been filled
with excitement upon arriving in the city that was both the capital of Latvia and
a key seaport—a city situated on the Daugava River just nine miles from the
Gulf of Riga where the river spilled into the vast, blue expanse of the Baltic Sea.
“Why?” he asked.
4 IMAGINATION (ROLF’S STORY)
But his query only received the cryptic reply, “We will tell you when you get
here. Just come home as quickly as you can!”
There was no mistaking the urgency of the message, and not just from the
tone of his father’s voice. Of all the people in the world, his father, Ernst,
understood better than anyone how much Rolf ’s aeronautical engineering
studies meant to him. It often seemed to Rolf that all of his twenty years up to
that time had been a preparation for what he considered to be his calling. Now
that he had finally begun his technical training, the abrupt summons home was
all the more troubling, since an interruption to his studies, begun only two
months prior, could prove to be a serious setback. He surmised that there must
be very bad news indeed.
It was with great trepidation that Rolf hurriedly packed a bag with a few
clothes and necessities, including class textbooks and notes. He left the boarding
house, walking briskly to the Riga train station, which at midday was nearly
empty. From the platform, he soon saw the train approaching, steam pouring
out of its smokestack, bringing with it the familiar smell of coal smoke, a smell
that he had always associated with pleasant memories of vacation, travel and
adventure. Although he was unaware that in the next seven years such trips
would no longer be so pleasant, he did sense, as he settled into his seat on the
half-empty train, that this journey was somehow different, that he was leaving
carefree times behind.
Even as the locomotive pulled out of the station, gaining speed towards Liepaja,
120 miles westward on the Baltic coast, Rolf’s thoughts were just as rapidly overtaken
by a sense of dark foreboding. After crossing the Daugava River, long celebrated by
poets as “The River of Destiny,” and once beyond the city limits, the passing scenery
opened up to flat countryside with woods, meadows and farmland stretching into
the distance, only occasionally interrupted by smaller cities and towns.
The first foreshadowing of things to come appeared during that train ride.
On sidetracks, about fifty miles outside Liepaja, waiting to continue westward,
long, sinister transports carrying an odd assortment of old tanks, horse-drawn
wagons and other outdated military vehicles and equipment stood lined up and
Storm Clouds Gather 5
ready, like macabre, silent sentinels awaiting orders to a new post. Jerked out
of his reverie, Rolf stared with alarm at the railroad cars, marked with a
symbol that was by that time all too familiar to most people living in the Baltic
States. On the side of the motley cars, in bold, red paint, was the dreaded
Soviet hammer and sickle.
Even though Rolf was well aware of recent events in Europe, there was a
missing piece of the puzzle, to which he and most people not associated with the
Latvian military were not yet privy. He was aware from radio reports that two
months prior, Germany and the Soviet Union had signed a secret pact, but he did
not know that it entailed a plan to partition Poland and to bring the Baltic States
of Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia under Soviet domination. The German-Soviet
Non-Aggression Treaty, also known as the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, established
Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union as secret partners in crime.1 The pact
unleashed a flood of miseries, secretly sanctioning Hitler’s invasion of Poland on
September 1, 1939, and the official outbreak of World War II while the Soviet
giant stood passively and enigmatically on the sidelines. Or so it seemed at first.
The ominous transports only served to confirm Rolf ’s worst suspicions, for
in his heart he already feared that the summons from his father must be
connected with the Soviet threat that had been hanging like a storm cloud over
Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania ever since the Russian Revolution toppled the
Czarist Regime in 1917. That was two years before Rolf was born, but he knew
from the history books in school and from dinner table conversations growing
up that Latvia had been part of the vast Russian Empire until the beginning of
World War I when Germany defeated the Russian armies there and gained
control. In 1918, after World War I ended, the country nominally gained its
independence, but for two more years Germany and the new Soviet government
each made numerous attempts to reestablish a foothold in Latvia. It was only
with the help of Great Britain and France that the Latvian people were finally
victorious. In 1920, peace was established and an independent, democratic Latvia
emerged out of the chaos.
During the tumultuous years of World War I, Rolf ’s father Ernst, a Latvian
of German descent, had served as a Czarist Russian officer and was taken
6 IMAGINATION (ROLF’S STORY)
prisoner of war by Germany. He continued working in Germany upon release
from the prisoner-of-war camp at the war’s end. Shortly thereafter, he met and
married Maria. It was there in 1919, among his mother’s people, in the part of
Germany west of the Rhine River called the Rhineland, that Rolf was born.
German-born Maria would have much preferred to stay in her native land
indefinitely, but in September of 1921, with peace seemingly restored in Latvia,
Ernst insisted that the family return to his Baltic homeland.
Unfortunately, in the aftermath of war, relations between native Latvians and
those of German descent chilled to the point of open hostility. If the truth be
told, they were never particularly amicable. Native Latvians made up about
seventy percent of the population, with the remaining thirty percent split
between Baltic Germans and Latvian Jews. The Baltic Germans were historically
landowners and professionals, the Jews were mostly merchants, and the native
Latvians, by and large, worked as farmers and laborers. Much farther back in
feudal times, many of the native Latvians had labored as serfs on the great estates
of Baltic Germans, so there was a long trail of animosity.
Yet Ernst had been optimistic that the hostilities would blow over, as they
often had in the past. Once Rolf and his sister Ruth, who was born in Latvia in
1923, were old enough to understand, Ernst merely cautioned them to speak
only Latvian in public. Never mind that their mother, Maria, had been born in
the Rhineland and had never learned Latvian. And never mind that the toddler,
Rolf, with his very light blonde hair and blue eyes, was impossible to pass off as
a native Latvian. But Ernst had been partly right: after the First World War
ended, things in Latvia did settle down to a stable, if occasionally tense,
coexistence between the various national and ethnic groups.
After switching trains, Rolf reflected on his life in Latvia as the train raced
along the tracks to Kara Osta, the suburb north of Liepaja where his parents
lived. Despite memories of a few difficult times during his formative years, Rolf
had always considered the little nation by the Baltic Sea to be his home. He did
not think it likely that the ancient tension with the native Latvians was the reason
for his father’s sudden call. Rolf was aware that just a couple of months earlier,
the Latvian military had abruptly ordered a partial mobilization of its forces for
Storm Clouds Gather 7
purposes of national defense, fearing that the Soviets might take advantage of
Europe’s preoccupation with the war and attempt to reestablish a foothold in the
area. And during the previous month, there had been rumors that the military
base in their home city of Kara Osta, along with many other bases in Latvia,
would soon be taken over by the Soviets and leased to them for ten years. What
that really meant had been unclear, but his father’s cryptic summons now
suggested that things had taken a turn for the worse; the presence of Soviet
transports outside of Liepaja confirmed it.
By late afternoon, Rolf arrived at the family home, a five-room apartment in
a sturdy, imposing, two-story granite building that had formerly provided
quarters for Czarist Russian officers and their families, and which now was the
official housing for Latvian military families. This had been the Dutzmann
family’s comfortable haven for over seventeen years, but on the day of Rolf ’s
return, the once orderly and peaceful home was a beehive of frenzied activity.
Most of the rooms in the apartment, freshly painted and redecorated just a few
months earlier, were in wild disarray with boxes and wooden crates strewn
everywhere and a multitude of packing projects underway.
Ruth, Rolf ’s sixteen-year-old sister and only sibling, was carefully packing
the family’s china, crystal and glassware in the dining room. Aunt Paula, one of
his father’s sisters, was also present to help. She was the aunt that Rolf had come
to know best over the years because of all the time she had spent helping him to
master the Latvian language which had caused him such affliction during his
early school years.
His father was not present, but his mother, Maria, a woman in her early fifties,
with features too sharp and angular to be beautiful in the classical sense, but a
smile that had the ability to light up her face, stopped what she was doing to
give him a hug and to inquire whether he was hungry or thirsty. Rolf noticed
immediately that her usual impeccable sense of style and grooming had been
abandoned. She had taken little care in her appearance that day and there was
a strained look about her eyes as she smiled up at him, taking his face between
her hands and pushing the wavy blonde hair back from his forehead.
8 IMAGINATION (ROLF’S STORY)
“We’re moving?” Rolf asked anxiously, his striking blue eyes wandering
around the untidy quarters.
“Yes, the Russians are coming and all Latvian military personnel must be out
of the area by November tenth,” replied Maria.
“So that includes Father?”
“Yes, that includes your father. His plant is being moved to Salaspils, southeast
of Riga. I will let him tell you the rest when he returns home.”
She set Rolf to work packing his own possessions, and then turned her
attention once more to overseeing the packing of the family’s collections of
books, china, crystal, silverware, linens and other valued items. The rest of his
questions would have to wait.
When his father came home that night, Rolf was still awake. He knew right
away that Ernst was home because he could hear his voice in the front hallway
and, even at that late hour, the sound of laughter from Maria as he regaled her
with some humorous anecdote. His father’s perennial sense of humor had
always been one of his most admirable qualities. A man of medium height with
a strong build and a dark-haired, distinctly Slavic appearance, Ernst had piercing
eyes that, like the nearby Baltic Sea, could rapidly change from sky-blue to
storm-gray. Although commanding full respect at the artillery laboratory where,
as a captain in the Latvian Army, he supervised a munitions shop, he maintained
a relaxed attitude at home with his wife and children, having long since
relinquished the role of household disciplinarian to Maria.
Rolf intercepted his father in the hallway, his sister, Ruth, following close
behind. Ernst’s face lit up as soon as he saw his children, especially Rolf, whose
presence had been sorely missed since he moved away to Riga. Ernst’s pride in
his son would have been evident even to the most casual observer as they
exchanged a characteristic, hearty embrace.
When Rolf launched into a barrage of questions, Ernst explained that he was
personally responsible for organizing and supervising the packing and transport
of all of the equipment from the artillery laboratory, leaving only the empty
shells of buildings behind for the Soviet takeover. He would be unavailable,
therefore, to assist with the dismantling of the household.
Storm Clouds Gather 9
“We have other decisions to make, however,” he continued, addressing the
entire family.
Signaling Maria, Rolf and Ruth to follow him into the sitting room, he laid
out the basic facts of the family’s situation. The picture that he painted of their
future in Latvia under a Soviet regime was alarming. They would not be
welcome under the new regime. All of their lives, but especially his own, would
be in danger. Even if their lives should be spared, there would be few if any
opportunities to make a living. Finally, Ernst closed by saying that life under
Soviet domination would be oppressive and uncertain at best, and that many of
the personal and collective freedoms that they had enjoyed in the previous two
decades of Latvian autonomy could be expected to disappear virtually overnight.
“Our only recourse,” he concluded, “is to leave Latvia.”
Rolf quickly grasped the seriousness of their situation. What took longer to
sink in was the absence of agreeable alternatives. Turning the family’s dilemma
over and over in his mind, no other viable solution presented itself—the
comfortable life to which they had become accustomed was over. However, with
so much to be accomplished, he found little time to dwell on those thoughts.
They merely formed a persistent backdrop to the round of daily activities during
those transitional months—a backdrop of fear and uncertainty tempered by an
involuntary touch of excitement and curiosity about the new life awaiting them,
either of which could set his heart racing wildly.
Under the able direction of Maria, the packing project was rapidly
accomplished with most of their possessions carefully wrapped and placed into
wooden crates to be transported via rail to Riga. However, there was also much
that needed to be left behind and they faced many difficult decisions in the
days ahead.
A few days later, Ernst called an extended family conference at Rolf ’s
grandmother’s home in Liepaja—a two-story wooden house with two
apartments on the first floor that were usually rented out to tenants and a large,
comfortable living space on the second floor that was occupied by Rolf ’s
grandmother and two of his aunts. The gardens behind the house, generously
10 IMAGINATION (ROLF’S STORY)
planted with berry bushes and apple trees, and a nursery with a greenhouse next
door, still verdant in the month of October, made the home almost seem to be
out in the country, situated though it was in a row of similar houses on a
residential street.
When they arrived, the table was already set. An aromatic, lattice-top
Apfelkuchen (apple cake) sparkling with sugar and cinnamon crystals and a
platter piled high with Rolf ’s favorite cinnamon pastries were already set out on
the coffee table in the large dining room. By that time, Rolf ’s grandfather was no
longer living, but present were his paternal grandmother, Julia; two of his father’s
sisters, Paula and Ada; and his father’s younger brother, Alfons. Emily, a third
sister of Ernst’s, lived on a farm a considerable distance away and was unable to
be present. An atmosphere of heightened tension and expectancy held sway over
the gathering. Even Aunt Paula, in spite of her assistance in packing, had not yet
been fully apprised of the family’s plans, which Ernst, Maria, Rolf and Ruth had
established just three days prior. Rolf noted that his father waited until after they
had enjoyed the cake and coffee to make the announcement that he knew could
only come as a bitter blow to the extended family.
“As all of you know,” Ernst began, speaking in German so that all including
his wife Maria would understand, “the Soviets will very soon be occupying the
local military base and we are moving to Riga where I will continue my
employment for a time. The fact is that Latvia has had to decide between waging
a hopeless, bloody resistance to the overwhelming military might of Soviet
Russia or giving its consent for a takeover. For better or for worse, Latvia has
chosen the latter.”
He paused for a moment.
“What you do not yet know is that we have decided as a family to accept the
offer of repatriation extended by the German regime.”
There was a collective, audible gasp of shock at this news. It was seventeen
years prior that Ernst had returned to Latvia from Germany after World War I,
bringing with him his two-year-old son and his German bride, Maria, a woman
more than eight years his senior. Ernst, the oldest of five siblings, had been
Storm Clouds Gather 11
welcomed back into his family with great relief and celebration. The shock and
consternation on their faces now at this unpleasant news, revealed the anguish
they felt at the prospect of losing him yet again.
Rolf noticed his grandmother and Uncle Alfons glancing furtively over at
Maria. Their distrust and lack of acceptance of this German woman born in the
Rhineland, who had neither learned the Latvian language nor made much
attempt to assimilate into their culture or to make herself liked, had never before
been so painfully evident.
“Is there no other alternative, Ernst?” asked Rolf ’s grandmother.
Ernst continued, “The Soviets are notorious for breaking their agreements
and I am sure the ten-year lease of our military bases to them will be no
exception. Mark my words, once the Soviets arrive here, they will topple the
government and Latvia will become a Communist territory in no time at all. It
is easy to guess what our fate would be if we were to stay. I have many overt and
covert enemies at the artillery laboratory, mostly native Latvians with
Communist leanings and an axe to grind against Baltic Germans like us. For
two decades they have witnessed my outspoken criticism against Soviet policies
and Communism in general.”
“If we stay, Father would most likely be executed immediately or sent to
Siberia,” Rolf interjected. “Either way, we would be unlikely to ever see him again.”
After a pause, Ernst continued, “Maria, Rolf, and Ruth would also face
increased danger on my account, and I consider their survival to be my chief
responsibility. After discussing this as a family,” directing a pointed look at his
mother and Alfons, “Even with the uncertainties surrounding a return to
Germany during wartime, we all consider the repatriation offer to be the lesser
of two evils.”
This pronouncement was followed by a stunned silence, finally broken by
Aunt Paula.
“And what about your engineering studies, Rolf? With Germany already at
war, will you be allowed to continue them?”
“Unfortunately, I may not know until we arrive there. Father has said that it
is unlikely we will even be told of our resettlement location until after we
embark,” stated Rolf with a tone of barely disguised unease.
“Well, even though I am as shocked as everyone else, I think you cannot be
too careful with so much at stake. And therefore, I must say I find myself in full
agreement with your decision, Ernst,” responded Paula.
Paula was the second oldest only to his father and Rolf had always considered
her a force to be reckoned with—a woman equal in intelligence, drive and
energy to any man, a woman who refused to be intimidated or “kept in her
place.” He especially appreciated her keen intelligence and common-sense
approach at a time like this.
“You cannot afford to risk staying here,” she continued. “We know the
Russians’ reputation for dealing harshly with anyone who is not in alignment
with their propaganda. They would most certainly kill you, and maybe Maria,
Rolf and Ruth too. Perhaps we all would be in greater danger if you chose to stay.”
At this, her sister, Ada, nodded in wordless agreement.
There was a short silence after which Alfons stood up and, switching to the
native Latvian tongue, stated in a carefully controlled tone, “Have any of you
considered that what you are contemplating will make you traitors to your
homeland? You will be abandoning Latvia to her fate along with all of us, your
own family. Not only that, but the country that you are defecting to is one that
has been an enemy of Latvia for centuries!” He rose from his chair, his voice also
rising as he became increasingly distraught. “You will be traitors! Does that
matter to you at all?”
“That will be enough, Alfons!” The matriarch of the family stared him down
and turned to Ernst. “You must do what you think is best to save yourself and
your family. But just remember that your home will always be here in Latvia.”
She turned to look at Alfons, as if challenging him to respond, which he did.
“Latvia will never accept you back again,” spoken in a tone as cold as Baltic
ice. He turned on his heel indignantly, heading for the door, but then swung
12 IMAGINATION (ROLF’S STORY)
Storm Clouds Gather 13
back to face them for one last rebuke: “And I for one, hope never to see any of
you again!”
His departure was followed by an awkward silence in which his words hung
suspended like a lifeless victim in the hangman’s noose. Rolf was stunned.
Eventually Ernst commented quietly to his mother and sisters, “It is just as
well that he has left. I want you to know that not a word of our intentions should
leak out to anyone else. I will continue my work at the artillery laboratory after
the move to Salaspils without telling anyone of our plans to repatriate. My
enemies among the ranks would think nothing of turning us in.”
“Where will you live, Ernst?” asked Paula.
“We will find temporary housing. Suspicions may be aroused by the fact that
we will not be looking for permanent housing in the area and that our shipments
of furniture and other personal possessions will not be arriving. An unexpected
delay in our departure could be disastrous.”
The rift with Uncle Alfons continued to haunt Rolf ’s thoughts in the
following weeks, a time of great activity, but also of anxious anticipation of a
new and uncertain phase in his life to commence. He did not know at the time
of his uncle’s outburst that Alfons would indeed never see any of them again, but
then he was also totally unaware of the impending cataclysm that, in the span
of only a few short years, would not only bring sweeping changes to his own
life, but would fundamentally change the face of Europe forever.
14 IMAGINATION (ROLF’S STORY)
Chapter 2
Taking Flight from Latvia
December 6, 1939, the eve of the Soviet takeover of Latvia, was marked by
feverish wharfside activity in the port city of Riga, fueled by fear that had
assumed monstrous proportions due to the stories of atrocities committed by
the Soviets in other areas they had already occupied. After a few anxious months
of keeping up a pretense of permanent resettlement in Salaspils, Rolf, along with
his family and two thousand other “enemies” of the Soviet regime, were
preparing to board a large passenger ship, the Oceana, for repatriation to
Germany. The twenty-thousand-ton ship, used in peacetime as a cruise ship for
vacationers, had been abruptly pressed into service for the less light-hearted
pursuit of transporting people at risk out of the foundering Baltic States. Like
Rolf and his family, most of the people boarding the ship were Baltic Germans,
people of German descent living in Latvia. Many of these families had called
Latvia home for centuries, some as far back as the late twelfth century, when the
German Teutonic Order came to the area and founded the city of Riga.
Rolf and his father were carrying the small amount of luggage that the family
was allowed to take on board with them. In addition to a suitcase and one
smaller bag, Rolf carried a small stack of magazines: Modern Mechanics, Model
Airplane News and some German technical periodicals. Occasionally, he put the
Flight from Latvia 15
suitcase and bag down and rested the magazines on them, leafing through the
topmost issue.
Suddenly a man standing near them addressed Ernst. “I think I know you. Aren’t
you the inventor of the automatic assembly machine from the artillery laboratory?”
Rolf saw his father stiffen in alarm. They had taken great precautions in the
previous six weeks to tell no one other than immediate family members of their
plans to leave Latvia.
The man continued, “I was a co-worker of the three men who were blown to
bits there in ‘31 before that new German press and your invention improved
safety conditions.”
Sensing the man’s friendly intentions, Ernst relaxed and smiled. “I am
surprised that anyone would remember that.”
“I remember because my family was also fortunate enough to obtain one of
your custom-built radios. Sixteen years old now, but still working. That’s how
we keep up with all the news.”
“Just don’t believe everything you hear,” replied Ernst with a smile as the line
began to move. He turned to board the ship with Maria and Ruth.
The man shifted his attention to Rolf, who was gathering up his stack of
magazines. “Are you his son?”
At Rolf ’s affirmative nod, he inquired, “How are you measuring up against
your father’s reputation as engineer and inventor?”
“I’ve been building my first plane, a single-seater with a Walter four-cycle,
air-cooled engine, and I have started my studies to be an aeronautical engineer.
It’s what I want more than anything,” replied Rolf proudly, and then added, his
face reddening a bit, “I have a girlfriend too—Anna. And we like to dance.”
“Leaving a lot behind then, aren’t you, young man?” the man replied, with
the hint of a smile.
“I hope to continue my education once we arrive in Germany,” Rolf
answered, picking up his suitcase and magazines and preparing to follow his
father. And then with a laugh, “As for girls, I’ve heard it said that they exist
there too!”
16 IMAGINATION (ROLF’S STORY)
Rolf ’s feelings inside, however, did not match the happy and confident
exterior. It was with a sinking heart that he realized his university studies would
be disrupted, perhaps without the possibility of resumption at their destination.
He remembered the sad misgivings with which he and his sister Ruth had
participated in taking apart, stick by stick, the only home they had ever known,
and then moving to the spartan, temporary quarters at Salaspils. From nearby
Riga, their belongings were scheduled to go by ship to Germany where they
would sit in storage until the family managed to establish a new residence, either
in Germany proper or in the Warthegau, the westernmost zone of what was by
now occupied Poland.
Whereas Rolf had been born in Germany twenty years earlier, he was too
young when the family left to have any memories of it, and the thought of
moving back there did not hold any attraction for him. He realized that for Ruth,
born and raised in Latvia, it was an even more wrenching farewell because Latvia
was the only home she had ever known. Their grandmother, uncles, aunts and
friends—people with whom they had spent many happy times—were all staying
behind. Ruth’s high school education was being interrupted and would have to
be resumed in a strange country, and Rolf would have to apply to continue his
university studies in new and alien surroundings if he qualified to continue them
at all. He realized that if he were to be turned down, the result would be swift
induction into the German military, a prospect that filled him with morbid
dread. In addition, Rolf had been forced to leave behind all of the prize-winning
airplane models, so lovingly and painstakingly assembled from the time he was
ten years old, to say nothing of the handcrafted kayak and the full-sized plane
that he had worked on with so much effort and pride. All remained in storage
at his grandmother’s home in Liepaja.
As the ship pulled away from the pier, the family stood on the top deck amidst
other people who were waving goodbye to family members and friends. Would
they ever see any of their relatives again, Rolf wondered? Would those remaining
behind be all right once the Soviets took over? It was just as well that he did not
know the answers to those questions, for Latvia was perched on the brink of
many tumultuous years. There was some hope of reconnecting with his mother’s
Flight from Latvia 17
relatives in the Rhineland—if Germany proper was, in fact, to be their
destination, but even Ernst was still not privy to that.
Rolf had felt all along that his mother might be secretly glad that they were
returning to her homeland, but on board the Oceana, her expression was
unreadable. The relatives they were leaving behind in Latvia had not usually
been kind to this German woman who remained an aloof outsider to their
language and customs. What new trials, he wondered, would they all face in the
months and years ahead? Would they be accepted where they were going?
As the ship left the harbor, Ernst mused to his son with a tone of regret,
echoing Rolf ’s own wistful mood, “I will never live in my homeland again. It is
certain that once the Soviets have a foothold here, they will take over completely.”
Then, continuing after an introspective pause, “I have no great desire to return
to Germany, a country that will never seem like home to me. But, better to swim
in a barrel of water than a barrel of mud.”
Ernst lapsed into silence again as they watched the city of Riga becoming
smaller and smaller on the horizon. Such personal disclosures were uncommon
from his father, a man who had experienced massive changes in his life with
fortitude and good humor. Rolf reflected only briefly on the meaning of his
father’s comment, then was lost in thought over the whirlwind of events that
had forced them to flee their home. Now finding himself adrift toward an
uncertain future in a land not only unknown to him but also one that was at war,
he was unable to suppress a shiver. A shiver of anticipation or of dread? He was
not sure. For the first time in his life, he felt that the future was slipping out of
his control. A tide of vulnerability washed over him, creating an uncomfortable
knot in the pit of his stomach.
Eventually Ernst continued with a sigh of resignation, “Sad, that we are not
headed for America, the place of my dreams. As a young boy I would sit for
hours on the hillside of my parents’ farm, gazing at a sliver of the Baltic Sea
glistening like a string of jewels in the distance and imagining myself the captain
of a ship bound for America. In my early twenties, I wanted to make good on
that dream, but no sponsor was to be found. All my life I have entertained the
same dream—to be on a ship bound for America.”
The shoreline disappeared from view altogether, swallowed up as much by
bands of cold fog as by the distance they had traveled. Rolf and his family, as
well as two thousand fellow passengers, were now officially without a home
and without a country, completely at the whim and mercy of Hitler and the
Nazi regime.
18 IMAGINATION (ROLF’S STORY)